In Re Custody Of: D.r.k., Tracy Michelle Simms, Resp v. Daniel J. Simms, App

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedNovember 2, 2020
Docket80168-6
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re Custody Of: D.r.k., Tracy Michelle Simms, Resp v. Daniel J. Simms, App (In Re Custody Of: D.r.k., Tracy Michelle Simms, Resp v. Daniel J. Simms, App) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Custody Of: D.r.k., Tracy Michelle Simms, Resp v. Daniel J. Simms, App, (Wash. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

In re the Custody of No. 80168-6-I (cons. with No. D.R.K., 80169-4-I, No. 80261-5-I, and No. 80262-3-I) Child. DIVISION ONE DARYL FISH, UNPUBLISHED OPINION Respondent,

v.

DANIEL JEREMIAH SIMMS and TRACY MICHELLE SIMMS,

Appellants.

MANN, C.J. — Daniel Simms appeals a decree granting nonparental

custody of his son, D.R.K., to Daryl Fish. Simms, who was incarcerated and

appeared by telephone for the trial, raises several claims related to the

sufficiency of the evidence and the trial court’s treatment of him. Finding no error

in the procedure or outcome, we affirm.

I.

Simms is the father of D.R.K., born in 2005. Simms was convicted of first

degree robbery and two counts of second degree assault while armed with a No. 80168-6-I/2 (cons. with No. 80169-4-I, No. 80261-5-I, and No. 80262-3-I)

firearm in 2006. He is expected to remain in prison until 2038, well after D.R.K.

reaches adulthood.

While incarcerated, Simms has been moved to different prisons several

times because of “behavioral issues.” In 2014, Simms married Tracy Simms,

who he met through a prison pen pal program. 1

D.R.K. was raised primarily by his mother, who suffered from longstanding

substance abuse issues. Thus, D.R.K. spent substantial periods of his childhood

in foster care. Even so, D.R.K. and his mother maintained a strong bond. D.R.K.

has had limited interaction with Simms consisting of occasional letters, phone

calls, and visits to the prison.

D.R.K.’s mother died in 2014, when D.R.K. was nine years old. Tragically,

D.R.K. was alone in the house when she died and remained so for several days

until he told a neighbor what had happened. After his mother’s death, D.R.K.

went to live with his maternal grandmother, Sylvia Finne.

Finne asked the members of her church for assistance in caring for D.R.K.

Fish, an engineer at Boeing and a deacon at the church, volunteered to help.

Fish began helping D.R.K. with his homework, picking him up from school, and

taking him places on the weekends, including museums, baseball games, and

water parks. Fish also secured a reading tutor for D.R.K., signed him up for

swimming lessons, and served as a liaison between D.R.K.’s school and Finne,

who did not know how to use a computer.

1 Because Daniel and Tracy Simms share the same last name, we refer to Tracy by her first name for clarity. No disrespect is intended.

2 No. 80168-6-I/3 (cons. with No. 80169-4-I, No. 80261-5-I, and No. 80262-3-I)

In 2016, both Finne and Tracy filed petitions for nonparental custody of

D.R.K. Finne’s petition proceeded to trial first. Both Finne and Simms were

represented by counsel. A court appointed special advocate (CASA) reviewed

D.R.K.’s counseling and Child Protective Services (CPS) records and interviewed

D.R.K., Finne, Tracy, Fish, and the director of D.R.K.’s afterschool program.

According to the CASA’s report, D.R.K. would try to hide when Tracy came to

pick him up for visits with Simms. D.R.K. also disclosed that Simms got “angry

with him” during the visits. After two days of evidence and testimony, a superior

court found, based on the evidence, that Simms was incarcerated and “never

had any other parental role than having visitation time at the prison.” The court

awarded custody to Finne. Because of the ruling, Tracy voluntarily dismissed her

own petition.

By 2017, Finne was undergoing chemotherapy for cancer, and D.R.K. was

spending most of his weekends at Fish’s house. Fish took D.R.K. to Oregon to

spend Thanksgiving and Christmas with Fish’s extended family, and on a trip to

Disneyland. Finne gave Fish power of attorney to make medical decisions for

D.R.K.

In April 2018, Tracy contacted Finne to set up a visit between D.R.K. and

Simms. D.R.K., who had not seen Simms for about two years at this point,

became “upset and anxious” at the prospect of a visit, and asked to speak with a

counselor. D.R.K. told the counselor that Simms “is scary and gets really mad.”

Finne died in May 2018, and D.R.K. began living full-time with Fish.

Within a couple of weeks, both Tracy and Fish filed petitions for nonparental

3 No. 80168-6-I/4 (cons. with No. 80169-4-I, No. 80261-5-I, and No. 80262-3-I)

custody of D.R.K. Simms joined in Tracy’s petition. The parties stipulated to a

finding of adequate cause as to both petitions. The trial court did not consolidate

the petitions, but decided to hear them together for trial.

The trial court appointed a guardian ad litem (GAL), Christine Wakefield

Nichols. Wakefield Nichols interviewed 12 people, including D.R.K., Simms,

Tracy, Fish, Simms’s correctional officer, members of D.R.K.’s church, and

D.R.K.’s counselor. D.R.K. emphatically told Wakefield Nichols that he wanted to

live with Fish. He stated that he did not feel like he had much of a relationship

with Tracy. Fish told Wakefield Nichols that D.R.K. “burst into tears once worried

that he would have to go and live with [Tracy].” Tracy expressed reservations

about assuming custody of D.R.K., telling Wakefield Nichols that she was

contemplating a divorce from Simms “so I feel as if there isn't much point in

moving forward with the custody case.”

D.R.K. told Wakefield Nichols he did not want to see Simms, and he did

not feel that Simms had his best interests at heart. D.R.K. told Wakefield Nichols

he would only be willing to consider phone contact with Simms, but wanted Fish

to monitor the conversations.

Trial on the petitions occurred over a two-day period in May 2019, at

which point D.R.K. was 13 years old. Simms appeared, pro se, by telephone.

Tracy also appeared pro se. She filed two untimely motions to dismiss Fish’s

petition. The first, entitled “motion to dismiss Daryl Fish’s non-parental custody

petition for lack of subject matter jurisdiction due to violation of the clean-hands

doctrine,” asserted that Fish failed to timely notify her and Simms of Finne’s

4 No. 80168-6-I/5 (cons. with No. 80169-4-I, No. 80261-5-I, and No. 80262-3-I)

death so that he could gain an advantage in filing a nonparental custody petition,

and that this “fraudulent concealment” divested the trial court of jurisdiction. The

second, entitled “failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted,”

asserted that Fish could not establish the statutory grounds for nonparental

custody because Tracy was D.R.K.’s de facto parent. Tracy did not note the

motions on the court’s calendar, did not serve Fish or Wakefield Nichols with

notice of the motions, and did not provide working copies of the motions to the

court. In any event, the trial court considered the motions on the first morning of

trial, despite the procedural deficiencies, and denied both.

The trial court heard testimony from both Fish and Wakefield Nichols and

reviewed 31 exhibits. Tracy did not call any witnesses or offer any evidence

other than an undated and unsigned power of attorney in which Simms purported

to grant Tracy authority to care for D.R.K. The court offered Simms the

opportunity to testify and to call witnesses. Simms told the court he refused to

present any evidence or testimony “in protest.”

After considering the evidence and testimony, the trial court entered a final

order granting Fish’s petition for custody of D.R.K. The trial court found that Fish

was providing D.R.K.

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